Lodi News-Sentinel

Obama shortens Manning’s term, grants clemency to hundreds

- By Josh Lederman and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama commuted the prison sentence of Chelsea Manning on Tuesday, allowing the Army intelligen­ce officer who leaked scores of classified documents to go free nearly three decades early.

Manning, who will leave prison in May, was one of 209 inmates whose sentences Obama was shortening, a list that includes Puerto Rican nationalis­t Oscar Lopez-Rivera. Obama also pardoned 64 people, including retired Gen. James Cartwright, who was charged with making false statements during a probe into disclosure of classified informatio­n.

“These 273 individual­s learned that our nation is a forgiving nation,” said White House counsel Neil Eggleston, “where hard work and a commitment to rehabilita­tion can lead to a second chance, and where wrongs from the past will not deprive an individual of the opportunit­y to move forward.”

The actions are permanent, and can’t be undone by President-elect Donald Trump. White House officials said Obama would grant clemency to more individual­s on Thursday — his final day in office — but that batch was not expected to include prominent individual­s like Manning.

A former Army intelligen­ce analyst, Manning has been serving a 35-year sentence for leaking more than 700,000 classified government and military documents to WikiLeaks, along with some battlefiel­d video. She was convicted in military court in 2013 of six violations of the Espionage Act and 14 other offenses and has spent more than six years behind bars. She asked Obama last November to commute her sentence to time served.

Known as Bradley Manning at the time of her 2010 arrest, Manning came out as transgende­r after being sentenced, and LGBT rights groups took up her cause and lobbied the president to grant her clemency. She was held at a men’s prison in Fort Leavenwort­h, Kansas, and filed a transgende­r prisoner rights lawsuit, although the military did approve gender-reassignme­nt hormone therapy.

She attempted suicide twice last year, according to her lawyers, citing her treatment in prison. Manning has acknowledg­ed leaking the documents, but has she did it to raise public awareness about the effects of war on civilians.

White House officials said the president was inclined to grant clemency to Manning because she had expressed remorse for her crimes and had served several years of her sentence. The officials briefed reporters on a conference call on condition of anonymity.

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